Wednesday 10 October 2018

A Defence of BBC Question Time

The BBC is biased toward establishment politics. As Tom Mills points out in his excellent BBC Myth of a Public Service, it has always protected establishment interests and is now a thoroughly neoliberal institution to boot. That doesn't mean, however, the political leanings and assumptions underpinning the culture of BBC journalism are on show at all times. Part of the corporation's professional ethos is a standard of impartiality and balance, and while it often falls short I've met enough BBC journalists to know this is taken seriously by thousands of its employees. For those of us interested in reforming and remaking the BBC along more democratic lines, critique of the BBC has to be tempered by efforts at winning over those who work there as well as the millions who think public service broadcasting is, in principle, something worth defending.

Therefore something like the table above is unhelpful as well as being a load of rubbish. As someone who has more of a familiarity with Question Time than most (scholarly papers on the demographics and political balance of the show coming soon), as an attempt to portray bias on the programme this is almost as crude as over enthusiastic Labour people moaning about the odd Tory councillor who turns up in the audience as evidence of plants. For folks' information, Tories on social media act in exactly the same way when they turn up a Labour activist in the assembled. It's pretty clear what the author of this chart and those who have shared it are trying to do something similar: that because all MEP guests since 2013 have been anti-EU, Question Time is obviously biased.

Um, no. There are definitely biases in the composition of the show's guests. The progressive and almost total erasure of trade unionists while business's representation is undiminished is a particular bugbear of mine. Women continue to be underrepresented (with only one season, 1995-96 if memory serves, in which they provide more than 50% of total appearances), and not all regions are catered for equally as the show travels around the UK. However, Mentorn - the show's producers - do at least make an effort. The two main parties are more or less equally served when it comes to representation going back to the 1979-80 season, and the LibDems and its forerunners also got an appearance quota roughly consistent with seats/polling. Since their collapse at the 2015 general election and the SNP becoming the third party of British politics, their appearances have increased roughly in line with their parliamentary prominence. In earlier times, other parties like the Greens, Respect, the BNP, and way, way back the old official Communist Party have all contributed guests. Some of them were MEPs, others councillors, and not a few had no elected position at all. The Green Party's Natalie Bennett was no stranger to the panel, for instance, despite her not holding elected office.

And this brings me to UKIP. You might argue they were overexposed, though the producers would counter they have received coverage proportional to the size of their support. And that appears true enough. Yes, that even includes the 29 times Nigel Farage has appeared since his debut 18 years ago. However, what is clear is all those UKIP MEPs featured on the show were there as party representatives, there status as MEPs were not the primary criteria. And we know this because Douglas Carswell also went on as UKIP's rep after he became their (then single) MP. Neil Hamilton has gone on as a member of the Welsh Assembly. Cllr Lisa Duffy represented the party during their leadership contest in October 2016, and last but not least we had the lamentable Henry Bolton. Again, whatever the rights and wrongs of their being given a platform, Question Time applied the same proportional(ish) formula to them as a small party on the rise as they have done with other minor parties.

Of course, what makes the claim of anti-EU bias even more foolish is the no shortage of pro-EU voices. Despite being backbenchers, Chuka Umunna and Anna Soubry are regulars, as are other MPs who advocated a remain vote, as well as other guests - like Alastair Campbell - who are not reconciled to the Brexit vote.

As a measure of bias, this table is junk. It's a piss poor attempt to kick up a stink where none exists. Perhaps the guest range should be broadened to include more politicians from outside of Westminster, including those in local government who do not have a national profile as per Andy Burnham, but this is not the point our meme mongers are trying to make. Question Time accepts whoever the parties put up to represent them. It hasn't and doesn't care whether they're MPs, MEPs, councillors or whatever, it's the label that matters - as the show's records attest.

9 comments:

Amanda said...

The meme appears at first viewing to be accurate whatever someone may think of the EU.

Dialectician1 said...

Personally, I'd give up focusing any further attention on Question Time. It's like a Year 9 Citizenship lesson failed by Ofsted.

A dog's dinner of a programme, which nowadays very few people take seriously. You're better off with 'The One Show?' As Julie Birchill once commented: 'show business for the ugly' (or was that all Westminster politicians?)

Harry Enfield and Paul Whitehouse: http://youtu.be/p3tUqRBiMVo

Jim Denham said...

I think you're too forgiving of the BBC's clear pro-Brexit bias and the extent to which it's allowed itself to be cowed and brow-beaten by Brexiteers.

As Mike Galsworthy of Scientists for EU says "Remainers' exasperation with the BBC recently comes down to several factors. The corporation appears to toe governnment hard-Brexit lines unquestioningly, there is a clear pro-Brexit stance from a few leading BBC personalities and a blind-spot for large anti-Brexit events. But there's something else too. The BBC has allowed itself to become the pulpit of arrant superficiality in debate.

"This seems to be misunderstood by defensive BBC personalities, who attribute Remainers' pique to hearing 'people you disagree with saying things you don't like'. (Nick) Robinson's article was headlined: 'Remainers attacking BBC should be wary of ending up with a British Fox News.' The sub-header read: 'The United States is now a democracy in which there are no shared facts and are only disputed opinions.' Yet this is exactly where the BBC has failed. It has stopped being a resource and communicator of shared facts, and instead become an arbitrator of disputed opinions."

http://politics.co.uk/comment-analysis/2018/04/17/what-s-actually-going-on-with-the-bbc-and-brexit-bias

Phil said...

But Jim, this isn't about whether the BBC is pro or anti-Brexit. It's about Question Time, one very specific programme. And the claim is not supported by the evidence.

Jim Denham said...

As far as I can see the evidence produced *does* back up the specific claim being made (ie re MEPs): and certainly Farage is on far more often than his role in UK politics could possibly warrant.

Tmb said...

Just my two pennies worth. I always thought the BBC was pro-Remain, but there you go.

QT for me has become not much more than entertainment, a pantomime that few can really take seriously. You have the notorious one (Farage or some other) the Tory, the lefty liberal(s) and the celeb, a comedian or sitcom writer or so on. It's a glorified middle class dinner party without the wooden salad bowl and quinoa and crab salad.

QT simply reflects news and politics as a whole. It's dumbing down, but from the self professed elites, or as someone astutely said on here 'Opinionism'. Clever important people saying something, and somehow it's true. Our leaders, rulers, talking heads and opinion makers are wilfully inept, sheeplike, dumbed down and utterly smug. The Conspiracy of the Mediocre, in other words.

Terri said...

Curious about your thoughts on the implications of this article: https://mainlymacro.blogspot.com/2017/12/the-politicisation-of-immigration.html

It's about tabloid newspapers specifically and so not directly relevant to the BBC, but you can see clearly the tail wagging the dog when it comes to immigration - I wonder if likewise the BBC's scheduling of anti-EU / immigration figures first began before or after public opinion on immigration started to shift, i.e. if Newsnight scheduled anti-EU MEPs in response to or in anticipation of their proportionate support. Sounds like you have the scholarly papers to know the answer!

Dipper said...

I don't watch QT. It clearly has an anti-Brexit bias, and generally only has at the most one of the panel representing 52% of the electorate.

There is far too much time spent on the audience. No debate happens. The new Politics Live is a similar format in pundits but without annoying audience interruptions and more holding panellists to account. Much better.

As for Mike Goldsworthy and Scientists for EU. Scientists For Not Having A Proper Debate and Shutting down anyone Who Disagrees With Them would be a more accurate title, which is not a good look for scientists who are meant to be fearless investigators and critics of established views.

Tmb said...

I personally don't watch QT either. Politically, it is neither flesh nor fowl. For the most part, it is dumbed down pantomime.

Debate is reduced to people shouting at each other, disagreeing with each other. That's it.

The establishment, and the whole political machine and propaganda media that upholds it, is terrified of any narrative that moves away from a neoliberal economy and cultural left posturing. To rise in the machine, and to become more than a little cog, you have to internalise and regurgitate the New Orthodoxy effortlessly and mindlessly. If we were truly a democracy, we would be debating immigration, the economic system, the real dearth of representative democracy and anything else we chose to debate. In actual fact, do we really need QT or parliament to debate these things? We have the internet ...